40 episodes

FREED’s monthly radio show on KVMR 89.5 FM Nevada City.
Listen live on the first Monday of each month from 6:30 to 7 p.m.

Disability Rap KVMR-FM

    • Society & Culture

FREED’s monthly radio show on KVMR 89.5 FM Nevada City.
Listen live on the first Monday of each month from 6:30 to 7 p.m.

    Jennifer Gasner’s ‘Unexpected Life’ with Friedreich’s Ataxia

    Jennifer Gasner’s ‘Unexpected Life’ with Friedreich’s Ataxia

    We are joined today by author Jennifer Gasner. At the tender age of 17, Jennifer was diagnosed with Friedreich’s Ataxia, a rare progressive neuromuscular disease. In her new book, My Unexpected Life: Finding Balance Beyond My Diagnosis, she delves into what it was like to start college with this new diagnosis and how she initially coped with her changing body. Turning to alcohol and getting involved in a toxic relationship were ways she could escape what she was feeling inside. Through a friendship with the hit singer songwriter Dave Matthews, Jennifer realized that even though her life had taken an unexpected turn and she was now a wheelchair user, her life was not over.

    • 29 min
    Embodied Inclusion with Andrew Golibersuch

    Embodied Inclusion with Andrew Golibersuch

    Today, we’re joined by Andrew Golibersuch, an artist, activist, dancer, and founder of Embodied Inclusion, a project designed to help organizations, communities, and institutions become more inclusive and welcoming to all. In our interview, Andrew shares his journey as a disabled dancer and how his experiences in dance led him to create his Embodied Inclusion workshops, where participants learn what each of us needs to feel comfortable inhabiting space with themselves and others. Andrew is a mental health counselor and art therapist based in western Massachusetts.

    • 29 min
    Extended Version of Greg Marshall's Interview

    Extended Version of Greg Marshall's Interview

    This is an extended version of our interview with Greg Marshall. 
    Today, we’re joined by someone who has had cerebral palsy since he was born, but no one ever told him that he had CP or even that he had a disability. It was not until Greg Marshall was in his early thirties and applying for private health insurance for the first time that he learned, through a review of childhood medical records, that he actually had cerebral palsy. Up until that point, he just thought he had tight tendons, which was the line his parents used to explain why his feet and legs didn’t work like other kids his age.
    Greg Marshall takes us on a journey of discovery in his new book, Leg: The Story of a Limb and the Boy Who Grew From It. It’s a memoir not only about learning he had CP, but about a mom who fights cancer, a dad who gets diagnosed with ALS, and a sister on the autism spectrum. And it’s a coming out story: coming out as gay at age 19, and then coming out as disabled in his early thirties. The book is poignant and also incredibly funny and tells this unique story of a kid who grew up in a small town in Utah where the only person who didn’t know he had a disability was himself.
    In our interview, Greg Marshall tells us about growing up not knowing he had a disability and the impact this had on his relationships with family, partners, and most importantly, himself. Coming out as gay helped him to come out as disabled when he discovered his diagnosis of cerebral palsy in his thirties. Greg reflects on his family dynamics and caregiving, how disability made him a better lover, and how he shifted the self-critical voices of internalized ableism to a more gentle and accepting narrative embracing his many identities.

    • 51 min
    Greg Marshall’s Discovery of His ‘Leg’

    Greg Marshall’s Discovery of His ‘Leg’

    Today, we’re joined by someone who has had cerebral palsy since he was born, but no one ever told him that he had CP or even that he had a disability. It was not until Greg Marshall was in his early thirties and applying for private health insurance for the first time that he learned, through a review of childhood medical records, that he actually had cerebral palsy. Up until that point, he just thought he had tight tendons, which was the line his parents used to explain why his feet and legs didn’t work like other kids his age.
    Greg Marshall takes us on a journey of discovery in his new book, Leg: The Story of a Limb and the Boy Who Grew From It. It’s a memoir not only about learning he had CP, but about a mom who fights cancer, a dad who gets diagnosed with ALS, and a sister on the autism spectrum. And it’s a coming out story: coming out as gay at age 19, and then coming out as disabled in his early thirties. The book is poignant and also incredibly funny and tells this unique story of a kid who grew up in a small town in Utah where the only person who didn’t know he had a disability was himself.
    In our interview, Greg Marshall tells us about growing up not knowing he had a disability and the impact this had on his relationships with family, partners, and most importantly, himself. Coming out as gay helped him to come out as disabled when he discovered his diagnosis of cerebral palsy in his thirties. Greg reflects on his family dynamics and caregiving, how disability made him a better lover, and how he shifted the self-critical voices of internalized ableism to a more gentle and accepting narrative embracing his many identities.

    • 28 min
    Life with a Traumatic Brain Injury

    Life with a Traumatic Brain Injury

    Here at FREED we’ve recently restarted our Traumatic Brain Injury program, and while providing those services and supports in the community, we began hearing more and more stories about life with a TBI. According to the Brain Injury Association of America, 1 in 60 Americans are living with a permanent brain injury, and 2.8 million TBIs occur every year in the United States alone, and while there are common experiences among those living with TBI, we know – like all disabilities – their journeys are as unique as the people living them.    
    Today we are joined by Barb Foy and Calvina McEndree, who both live with TBIs to share their experiences of having a TBI, how it shapes their present and their outlook on the future.  

    • 29 min
    Ryan Prior on the Covid-19 ‘Long Haul’

    Ryan Prior on the Covid-19 ‘Long Haul’

    As the death toll from Covid-19 quickly rose throughout the United States and around the world in early 2020, many health officials, politicians, and media personalities had one clear message about those who contracted Covid-19: For those who didn’t die from the infection, it would be a simple respiratory illness and patients would fully recover in a matter of weeks. But for millions of people around the world, they didn’t fully recover after contracting SARS-Co-V-2; their symptoms lasted for months or years, often with no signs of easing up. This was not well understood by the medical community, and so it was patients who banded together, often online, to support each other and raise awareness of a condition that they themselves termed, “Long Covid.”
    This is the subject of a new book by our guest today, Ryan Prior. In The Long Haul: Solving the Puzzle of the Pandemic’s Long Haulers and How They Are Changing Healthcare Forever, Ryan documents the journey that people with Long Covid embarked on to advocate for recognition and understanding of this new condition in the medical community. He also shows how that advocacy was influenced heavily by those with another condition called myalgic encephalomyelitis, also known as chronic fatigue syndrome or ME/CFS. Writing from personal experience as someone who developed ME/CFS in high school, Ryan presents the similarities between ME and Long Covid, how they are both generally misunderstood by the medical profession, and how patients themselves were often on the front lines of understanding their own conditions and educating their doctors. He also connects these patient-led movements to the Disability Rights Movement of the 1970s and 80s and continuing today, and encourages the movements to unite around common goals.
    Ryan Prior is currently a journalist-in-residence at The Century Foundation. He has been a health and science writer for CNN since 2015 and has also written for The Guardian, the Daily Beast, USA Today, STAT News, and Business Insider.

    • 29 min

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